Al Brueggeman, Dan Breuker, Tom Bremer, Roger Bosma, Mark Dillehay, Randy Rowe, Allen Rowe, and Jarrod Wallace v. Osceola County, Iowa and City of Harris, Iowa

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedNovember 4, 2020
Docket19-1010
StatusPublished

This text of Al Brueggeman, Dan Breuker, Tom Bremer, Roger Bosma, Mark Dillehay, Randy Rowe, Allen Rowe, and Jarrod Wallace v. Osceola County, Iowa and City of Harris, Iowa (Al Brueggeman, Dan Breuker, Tom Bremer, Roger Bosma, Mark Dillehay, Randy Rowe, Allen Rowe, and Jarrod Wallace v. Osceola County, Iowa and City of Harris, Iowa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Al Brueggeman, Dan Breuker, Tom Bremer, Roger Bosma, Mark Dillehay, Randy Rowe, Allen Rowe, and Jarrod Wallace v. Osceola County, Iowa and City of Harris, Iowa, (iowactapp 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 19-1010 Filed November 4, 2020

AL BRUEGGEMAN, DAN BREUKER, TOM BREMER, ROGER BOSMA, MARK DILLEHAY, RANDY ROWE, ALLEN ROWE, and JARROD WALLACE, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

OSCEOLA COUNTY, IOWA and CITY OF HARRIS, IOWA, Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Osceola County, David A. Lester,

Judge.

Taxpayers appeal the district court’s ruling denying their petition for writ of

certiorari that challenged the joint adoption of an urban renewal area by the city

council and the county board of supervisors. REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Aaron W. Ahrendsen and John C. Werden of Eich Werden Steger &

Ahrendsen PC, Carroll, for appellants.

Stephen G. Kersten, Fort Dodge, for appellees.

Heard by Doyle, P.J., and Tabor and Ahlers, JJ. 2

TABOR, Judge.

This case returns to our court for a second time.1 This go-round,

Al Brueggeman and seven other taxpaying residents of Osceola County

(collectively “the taxpayers”) contend a resolution adopted by the City of Harris and

Osceola County violates Iowa’s urban renewal law. See Iowa Code ch. 403

(2015). That resolution anticipated using tax increment financing (TIF)2 to raise

revenue from properties with windmills in the county to cover the costs of the city’s

sewer rehabilitation project. In challenging the resolution, the taxpayers argued

the city and county ran afoul of the urban renewal law in three ways: (1) by not

entering into a valid joint agreement before passing the resolution, in violation of

Iowa Code section 403.17(4); (2) by establishing urban renewal areas that were

not contiguous, in violation of section 403.17(23); and (3) by including wind energy

conversion properties in the TIF, in violation of the ”spirit and purpose” of the urban

renewal law. The district court rejected the taxpayers’ claims.

1 In the first appeal, we addressed two preliminary issues: 1) whether the taxpayers had standing to contest the resolution establishing the urban renewal area; and 2) whether the taxpayers were untimely in challenging the ordinance authorizing tax increment financing in the urban renewal area. Brueggeman v. Osceola Cnty., No. 16-1552, 2017 WL 2464072, at *1 (Iowa Ct. App. June 7, 2017). Although we agreed with the district court that the taxpayers were untimely in challenging the TIF ordinance, we allowed the case to proceed based on the resolution. Id. at *5– 7. On timeliness, we stated: “Because the final action in the adoption of the ordinance took place on November 10, the plaintiff’s November 3 petition challenging the ordinance was untimely.” Id. at *5 (citing Iowa R. Civ. P. 1.1402(3)). On standing, we reversed the district court’s ruling, finding the taxpayers could challenge the resolution because it was “sufficiently likely” they would suffer harm from the creation of the urban renewal area due to the anticipated use of TIF. Id. at *7. 2 See Iowa Code § 403.19 (authorizing use of TIF “for the benefit of the state, city,

[or] county”); see also Brueggeman, 2017 WL 2464072, at *1 n.1 (quoting Concerned Citizens of Se. Polk Sch. Dist. v. City of Pleasant Hill, 878 N.W.2d 252, 254 (Iowa 2016) (providing a detailed explanation of the TIF process)). 3

On appeal from that rejection, the taxpayers reprise all three challenges to

the urban renewal area. But their focus is on the first claim. They argue the city

council could not retroactively ratify an alleged joint agreement with the county, as

required by section 403.17(4) to form the urban renewal area. Why not? Because

the council did not pass a resolution, as required by Iowa Code section 364.3(1),

authorizing the mayor to enter into that agreement. The taxpayers argue that

under City of Akron v. Akron-Westfield Community School District, any oral

agreement between the mayor and the county was void (not just voidable) and

thus not subject to later ratification. See 659 N.W.2d 223, 225 (Iowa 2003).

We agree City of Akron controls. That case held that “any contract with a

city entered without a formal motion, resolution, amendment or ordinance is void.”

Id. In justifying what seemed like an “unduly harsh” result, the Akron court

reasoned: “The legislature considered it of first importance for city officials to

observe formal requirements before obligating taxpayers to finance the affairs of

city government.” Id. at 225–26. Because Harris did not take formal action to enter

the joint agreement with the county, any later effort at ratification fails. Without a

valid joint agreement, the city and county did not satisfy the requirements of section

403.17(4) for establishing the urban renewal area. Given the importance of

protecting taxpayers from municipal actions executed without observing statutory

requirements, we reverse the ruling and remand to the district court. Finding the

first issue dispositive, we need not address the two other claims on appeal.

I. Facts and Prior Proceedings

Harris is a small city in Osceola County. In fact, at last count, the city had

fewer than two hundred residents. To serve those residents, Harris began 4

operating its own wastewater treatment facility in 2004 under a pollution discharge

permit issued by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR). For many

years, Harris drained its wastewater into a single “stabilization lagoon.” That

lagoon drew DNR scrutiny from 2008 until 2014 because wastewater often

overflowed into the nearby Ocheyedan River. Finding “the lagoon was not

providing adequate storage time before wastewater was being released to the

receiving stream,” the DNR issued an administrative consent order against the city

for violating its permit and DNR regulations. Under the consent order, Harris had

to “submit a facility plan for the rehabilitation of the collection system” by August

2015 and begin reconstruction by July 2016. All repairs and improvements needed

to be completed by August 2017 to avoid civil and possibly criminal penalties.

In February 2015, the city council and mayor Greg Spaethe met to discuss

the DNR order. Although the city council unanimously agreed to move forward

with the rehabilitation project, the city lacked a sufficient tax base to pay for the

improvements. With estimated costs “ranging from $1.2 million up to $2 million,”

city attorney Daniel DeKoter recommended using TIF, explaining it “was the only

available source” of financing that would allow the city to bring the facility up to

code.3 Because TIF required creating an urban renewal area that would include

certain windmill properties located beyond the city’s boundaries, DeKoter informed

the city council that Harris could not proceed with the project without Osceola

County’s consent.

3DeKoter testified “the borrowing capacity, under [the city’s] general bonding, would be maybe $400,000 to $500,000 maximum.” But with TIF, the city would have the capacity to borrow from general tax revenue funds available to Osceola County to finance the project. 5

Based on DeKoter’s recommendation, the city council unanimously passed

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Al Brueggeman, Dan Breuker, Tom Bremer, Roger Bosma, Mark Dillehay, Randy Rowe, Allen Rowe, and Jarrod Wallace v. Osceola County, Iowa and City of Harris, Iowa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/al-brueggeman-dan-breuker-tom-bremer-roger-bosma-mark-dillehay-randy-iowactapp-2020.